New v. Smith

155 P. 1080, 97 Kan. 580, 1916 Kan. LEXIS 353
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 11, 1916
DocketNo. 20,358
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 155 P. 1080 (New v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New v. Smith, 155 P. 1080, 97 Kan. 580, 1916 Kan. LEXIS 353 (kan 1916).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

This is the fifth time this case has been before this court. (New v. Smith, 68 Kan. 807, 74 Pac. 610; 73 Kan. 174, 84 Pac. 1030; 86 Kan. 1, 119 Pac. 380; 94 Kan. 6, 145 Pac. 880.) It would serve no good purpose to restate the [581]*581details of the litigation. The curious and the studious may refer to its earlier chapters in the reports of this court.

It is chiefly a lawsuit for the recovery of a farm. When the case arose, the plaintiff was a prisoner in the penitentiary for the murder of her husband. Her life sentence was commuted by Governor Leedy, and some years ago she received a pardon from Governor Hoch.

This lawsuit has become a public nuisance, and it must be concluded. The last time it was here the court, in the hope of terminating this controversy, suggested how it might be done. It was held that although the plaintiff was entitled to the recovery of her farm, the defendant had an equitable claim for mortgages paid by him, and that if there was a claim for rents and profits, pleadings pertaining thereto might be filed, the amount ascertained and the litigation closed.

When the ■ case was remanded to the district court, a so-called supplemental petition was filed, claiming rents and profits for the years 1898 to 1910 inclusive — another and separate action having theretofore been filed for the rents for the years 1911, 1912 and 1913 — and asking for an accounting; and if an accounting could not be had, that she be awarded the reasonable value of the rents, and that so much thereof as necessary be applied to the satisfaction of the mortgages paid by defendant, and for further equitable relief, etc.

To this a technical demurrer was filed, as if the broad principles of equity had nothing to do with the case — those very principles which had been applied by this court most generously in defendant’s behalf to refund to him the amount of the mortgages paid off, notwithstanding he was a trespasser ab initio, having acquired possession of Mrs. New’s farm in January, 1898, from one who had defrauded her of it, with defendant’s constructive or actual notice of the fraud, as has been heretofore adjudicated. The demurrer set up a denial of jurisdiction, another action pending, no cause of action, and improper joinder. The demurrer was overruled. Defendant then answered, setting up the action pending for the rents for the years 1911-1913; that the instant cause had not accrued within two years, nor within three years, nor within five years, nor within fifteen years; that he had paid off a mortgage on one quarter section for $325 in December, 1898, and another mortgage on the same quarter section for $682.37 in [582]*582March, 1907; and. that he paid off still another mortgage on an additional eighty acres of the farm for $444.70 in March, 1907; that he had expended certain sums for the maintenance and improvement of the property; that he had paid the taxes' for 1898 and succeeding years, and that he did not know what rents had been collected and could not make an accounting thereof:

The court found that the fair and reasonable rental value of the farm was $825 per annum, being $200 for the quarter section and $125 for the additional eighty acres.

Findings of fact and conclusions of law were made by the trial court, but too extended for repetition here. Both parties appeal, with long assignments of errors.

The most practical way to deal with these matters is to consider very briefly what has already been determined in this case.

In the first appeal, decided in 1903, the pleadings were in question, and while they were held to be defective, the petition attempted to state a cause of action in ejectment, a cause of action for relief on the ground of fraud and for the rents and profits then accrued. The action had been begun on April 2,1901. This data is gleaned from the files of this court.

In the second appeal, decided in 1906, the petition was again the subject of criticism, but it continued to urge a cause of action in ejectment and for rents and profits.

In the third appeal, decided in 1911, the petition still recited a cause of action in ejectment, but claimed nothing for rents and profits unless that be assumed from the prayer for “all other proper relief.” But among the many defenses set up in the answer, filed January 21, 1908, nothing was mentioned concerning the mortgages paid by defendant. That defense, or equitable claim, had not yet been raised, although one of the mortgages had been paid in 1898, nearly ten years before, and the other two had been paid about ten months before the answer was filed. This court held that while the action sounded in ejectment, it was in essence an action for relief on the ground of fraud.

In the fourth appeal, decided in 1915, the petition was substantially the same as in the third appeal, and the answer was simply a general .denial except as to an admission of defen d' [583]*583ant’s possession of the premises. While this was all that was technically necessary to raise every possible defense, it is worthy of note that defendant’s claim for mortgages paid by him was first raised in the oral statement of his counsel at the trial in May, 1913, over twelve years after this lawsuit was begun! This court modified the judgment of the district court, affirming plaintiff’s judgment for the recovery of her farm, but granting to defendant an equitable claim, somewhat akin to that of a mortgagee in possession, for the payment of the mortgages by him during the years when he wrongfully held the plaintiff’s property.

The district court found that the reasonable rents of the quarter section far exceeded the mortgages and taxes paid thereon by defendant, and allowed them to be set off against each other, and no further. (Civ. Code, § 102.) For no very logical reason apparent to us, a somewhat different consideration was given to the status of the additional eighty acres. Perhaps this was on the ground that although the eighty acres was an integral part of the farm and that although the defendant had wrongfully held the possession thereof for all these years, he acquired a colorable right in equity to hold the eighty acres in March, 1907, by paying off the mortgagé on it, which altered his situation as a trespasser — his status for the preceding nine years. It was apparently on this theory that by the trial court’s mathematical computations, which we will not analyze, a balance of $70.59 was still due to defendant before plaintiff would be let into possession of the eighty acres. Apparently no consideration, or allowance, was accorded to plaintiff for the reasonable rental use of the eighty acres for the first nine years of defendant’s wrongful possession.

It ought to be apparent that defendant’s contentions as to the státute of limitations have no place in this lawsuit. In the early years of the litigation, the plaintiff’s petitions, however crude and in need of the amendments made from time to time, persisted in a claim for rents and profits. True, the specific claim therefor was dropped as the years went by and as the case went from court to court; but it should be borne in mind that the lawsuit was a dozen years old before she was called upon to meet defendant’s claim for mortgages paid. And in fairness and equity it must be borne in mind also that the rea[584]

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Bluebook (online)
155 P. 1080, 97 Kan. 580, 1916 Kan. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-v-smith-kan-1916.